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Gnome / Wayland evt.
linuxaudio.dev
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The long answer for Wayland is a bit more complex. As Linux's modern display server protocol, Wayland was developed as a direct replacement for X11. Thanks to Xwayland, a compatibility layer for X11 integrated into Wayland, X11 applications and plugins work without issues in most cases on Wayland. Currently, none of the popular plugin frameworks support Wayland directly. However, this is actively being worked on (at least for some of the frameworks, such as JUCE and DPF) and there's workarounds for certain scenarios as well. For the time being, this means that if a DAW does not offer X11 support, as is the case with, for example, PreSonus' Studio One, it can't be run on X11. However, such a DAW can still load X11 plugins via Xwayland perfectly fine on Wayland. And all of this without the user even noticing it.
Home – Linux Audio Plugin Development (LAPD)
LAPD aims to make Linux more attractive as a platform for computer-based music production.